Online Threat Alerts (OTA)
An anti-cybercrime community alerting the public.

What is Email Spoofing and the Dangers?

E-mail Spoofing is the process of changing the sender's email address, name and other routing information of an e-mail message, to make the e-mail appear as if it came from someone else. So, although an email message may have appeared as if it came from someone or has that person's e-mail address in the "From" address line, it doesn't mean it was sent by that person.

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Why Cyber-criminals Spoof Email Messages?

E-mail spoofing is so easy to do that it can be done from Microsoft Outlook, Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo email and other email clients. You can easily send an e-mail to a friend and change the "From address" to info@onlinethreatalerts.com. When your friend receives this email message it will appear as if it came from the Online Threat Alerts (info@onlinethreatalerts.com).

Almost everyone would open an e-mail message if they are familiar with the sender's email address and name. So, this is the reason why scammers and spammers use this technique to trick persons into clicking on malicious/phishing links, opening malicious attachments and e-mail advertisements sent as spam.

An email message contains header information that is used by an e-mail server to route the message to the recipient. This information is not visible to you when you are reading an e-mail message, but it can be viewed from your email client's menu option. It is the header information that is altered in order to spoof an email message.

E-mail Message Header Information

It is important that you remember that if you receive a suspicious e-mail appearing as if it came from a legitimate organization (bank, insurance company, school, government institution), family member or friend, contact the sender before clicking on any links, opening any attachments or following any instructions in that e-mail message.

This is because the email message may have been spoofed my cyber-criminals to trick you into opening a malicious attachment or clicking on a malicious link that will infect your computer with a virus, Trojan horse or other malware.

Check the comment section for additional information, or share what you know or ask a question about this article, by clicking the 'View or Write Comment' button below.

Note: Some of the information in samples on this website may have been impersonated or spoofed.

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